Ceres Gulf, Inc. v. Director, Office of Worker's Compensation Programs

683 F.3d 225, 2012 A.M.C. 1753, 2012 WL 1977908, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 11237
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJune 4, 2012
Docket11-60456
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 683 F.3d 225 (Ceres Gulf, Inc. v. Director, Office of Worker's Compensation Programs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ceres Gulf, Inc. v. Director, Office of Worker's Compensation Programs, 683 F.3d 225, 2012 A.M.C. 1753, 2012 WL 1977908, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 11237 (5th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

EDITH H. JONES, Chief Judge:

Ceres Gulf, former employer of retired longshoreman Ñorris Plaisance, Jr., challenges a Benefits Review Board (“BRB”) decision that overruled an Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”) twice and held Ceres Gulf liable for Plaisance’s hearing loss. Because the BRB initially applied the wrong legal test and standard of review to the ALJ’s decision, we REVERSE.

I. Background

Plaisance (“Claimant”) worked as a longshoreman for various employers beginning in the 1950s and for Ceres Gulf (“Petitioner”) from 1982 until he retired in 1988. He noticed an initial hearing loss in 1976, for which he obtained hearing aids. After retiring, he was diagnosed with both conductive and sensorineural hearing loss. 1 In March 2006 he filed a claim against Ceres Gulf, his last maritime employer, pursuant to the Longshore and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act, 33 U.S.C. § 901 ef seq. (“LHWCA”).

In his initial decision and order, the ALJ found in favor of the employer. He concluded that the Claimant provided evidence sufficient to invoke the presumption of causation under Section 20(a) of the LHWCA, 33 U.S.C. § 920(a) (“In any pro, ceeding for the enforcement of a claim for compensation under this chapter it shall be presumed, in the absence of substantial evidence to the contrary ... [t]hat the claim comes within the provisions of this chapter.”) (the “Section 20(a) presumption”). Nevertheless, he held that the em *227 ployer rebutted the presumption by substantial evidence, and he found based on the record as a whole that the employer’s workplace was not the cause of Claimant’s injury.

On appeal, the Benefits Review Board (“BRB”) vacated and remanded for further consideration. It held that some of the evidence relied on by the ALJ to satisfy the “substantial evidence” standard could not, as a matter of law, contribute to rebutting the presumption. It first excluded the expert opinion of Dr. Irwin, who stated that the relationship between the sensorineural hearing loss and Claimant’s noise exposure was possible but not definite because of potential exogenous causes. The BRB concluded that these statements could not establish rebuttal in light of the aggravation rule, which holds that even if employment combined with other preexisting causes of the loss, the entire disability is compensable. See, e.g., Strachan Shipping v. Nash, 782 F.2d 518, 517 (5th Cir. 1986) (en banc) (“[Wjhere an employment injury worsens or combines with a preexisting impairment to produce a disability greater than that which would have resulted from the employment injury alone, the entire resulting disability is compensable.”) (citations omitted).

Second, the BRB excluded two of the bases for the opinion of the employer’s expert, Dr. Seidemann: the use of sound level surveys and generalized population information regarding hearing loss. Dr. Seidemann opined that the plaintiff exhibited a mixed-use hearing loss, comprising both a mild sensorineural hearing loss and a more severe bilateral conductive hearing loss, the latter of which could not possibly have been caused by noise exposure. 2 He also concluded that while sensorineural hearing loss can be caused by noise exposure, this Claimant’s sensorineural hearing loss was not actually caused by noise exposure, because Claimant’s hearing was better than average for someone his age and because the doctor’s noise studies performed in various longshore environments did not reveal noise levels high enough to cause hearing loss.

The first basis, the BRB wrote, could not constitute evidence against the presumption because the hearing capacity of the average person of Claimant’s age was logically unrelated to whether Claimant’s present hearing loss was caused, aggravated, or contributed to by his employment. An employer takes his employee as he finds him, even if that employee enjoys unusual hardiness or frailty. See Gooden v. Dir., Office of Worker’s Comp., 135 F.3d 1066, 1069 (5th Cir.1998), quoting Southern Stevedoring Co. v. Henderson, 175 F.2d 863, 866 (5th Cir.1949) (“There is no standard or normal man who alone is entitled to workmen’s compensation.”).

The BRB also rejected the second basis for Dr. Seidemann’s opinion — his noise studies in different longshore environments — as rebuttal of the Section 20(a) presumption. The ALJ had found that there was evidence sufficient to invoke the Section 20(a) presumption that noise levels in Claimant’s work environment caused hearing loss. That finding was not challenged on appeal. According to the BRB, paraphrasing New Orleans Stevedores v. Ibos, 317 F.3d 480, 485 (5th Cir.2003), it therefore fell to the employer to “demonstrate ... that exposure to injurious stimuli did not cause the employee’s occupational disease.... ” Evidence from other longshore facilities was held irrelevant to rebut the Claimant’s testimony concerning his exposure. The BRB remanded for *228 consideration whether the employer had rebutted the presumption by substantial evidence, absent these three impermissible bits of evidence.

On remand, the ALJ concluded that without this evidence the employer had failed to rebut the presumption of compensability. The sole remaining ground for Dr. Seidemann’s conclusion was that Claimant’s non-work-related otosclerosis functioned as a built-in earplug that may have served as a hearing protector, reducing the impact of workplace noise-exposure. In the ALJ’s judgment, this was not alone substantial evidence against the presumption. The ALJ therefore held that Claimant suffered work-related hearing loss during employment with Petitioner. He found only an 8.4% binaural hearing loss compensable. Because Claimant had not shown that his non-work-related hearing loss predated his work with the Employer, that condition could not have been “aggravated” during employment.

In its second opinion, the BRB affirmed the ALJ’s revised finding of compensable injury. However, it held that the ALJ erred in holding that Claimant must prove that his conductive hearing loss pre-existed his work-related hearing loss. The BRB placed the burden on the employer to provide substantial evidence that it did not. It held that in view of the Section 20(a) presumption, the entire hearing impairment was work-related, and the employer failed to produce substantial evidence that some portion of the disability was due to an intervening cause post-dating the work injury. Ceres Gulf was accordingly held liable for the Claimant’s total 80.8% hearing loss.

On appeal, Ceres Gulf challenges the BRB’s exclusion in its first decision of the two bases for Dr. Seidemann’s opinion and the BRB’s conclusion in its second decision that the amount of compensable hearing loss was 80.8%.

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683 F.3d 225, 2012 A.M.C. 1753, 2012 WL 1977908, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 11237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ceres-gulf-inc-v-director-office-of-workers-compensation-programs-ca5-2012.